The Sikorsky CH-53 Sea Stallion was designed as a heavy-lift assault transport to succeed to the CH-37 for service with the US Marine Corps and is currently the largest helicopter in service in the West. The Sea Stallion featured a rear-loading ramp in its voluminous fuselage capable of carrying over three dozen equipped troops, trucks, 105-mm howitzers, HAWK SAMs, and even an Honest John SSM on its trailer. It was later adopted by both the USMC and the US Navy as the improved Super Stallion which featured a whopping three engines and was optimized for multiple naval roles including minesweeping. It would also not take long before the USAF also adapted the CH-53 for its own uses, in this case for support of special operations such as infliltration and exfiltration where it equipped with some of the most advanced avionics ever fitted on a helicopter. The CH-53 saw extensive action in Vietnam and virtually every conflict involving the US since, it has also been exported to German (built locally by VFV-Fokker), Iran, Israel, Mexico and Japan. Currently it is in the process of being replaced by the tilt-rotor V-22.
The first Sikorsky S-65 flew on 14 October 1964 and entered service as the CH-53A Sea Stallion, later improved into the CH-53D with increased troop loading capacity, new engines, and folding of main and tail rotors for storage on carriers. The US Navy eventually adopted the RH-53A for mine countermeasures and the RH-53D for minesweeping, both based on their USMC counterparts although with a number of structural improvements and an inflight refuelling probe. The ultimate version of the S-65 was the CH-53E Super Stallion, adopted by both the USN and USMC as their standard multi-role heavy-duty helicopter. The CH-53E features a lengthened fuselage, three engines and a larger seven-blade rotor giving it twice the lift capability of its predecessor (mine countermeasures were installed in the MH-53E Sea Dragon ). Finally, USAF versions began with the HH-53B development for search-and-rescue (later improved in the HH-53C) which was nicknamed 'Super Jolly Green Giant' and later, the armed MH-53H Pave Low (previously designated HH-53H) for all-weather support of special operations. Newer versions like the MH-53J Pave Low III and MH-53M Pave Low IV carry advanced avionics including FLIR, terrain-following radar and GPS guidance.
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Design | CH-53D | CH-53E | MH-53J |
Name | Sea Stallion | Super Stallion | Pave Low III |
Type | Transport | Transport | Multi-Role |
Year | 1969 | 1981 | 1981 |
Crew | 3 | 3 | 6 |
Dimensions | |||
Length | 26.90 m | 30.19 m | 26.90 m |
Height | 7.569 m | 8.661 m | 7.620 m |
Rotor Diameter | |||
Rotor Disc Area | |||
Wing Span | 22.02 m | 24.08 m | 22.02 m |
Wing Area | n/a | n/a | n/a |
Weight | |||
Empty | 10,727 kg | 15,071 kg | 14,515 kg |
Maximum | 19,051 kg | 33,339 kg | 22,680 kg |
Wing Loading | 50.0 kg/m² | 73.2 kg/m² | 59.6 kg/m² |
Performance | |||
Speed | 319 km/h | 315 km/h | 266 km/h |
Ceiling | 5,334 m | 5,639 m | 4,877 m |
Range | 1,641 km | 2,076 km | 1,112 km |
Powerplant | |||
Engine | 2 x T64-GE-413 General Electric 2,927 kW | 3 x T64-GE-416 General Electric 3,266 kW | 2 x T64-GE-100 General Electric 3,229 kW |
Thrust/Weight | 0.67 | 0.79 | 0.54 |
Armament | |||
Guns | - | - | 3 x 7.62-mm |
Payload | 5,897 kg | 16,329 kg | 9,072 kg |
Production | |||
Built | 126 | 177 | 41 |
Total | ? |